The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, June 20, 1952, Image 2

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w PAGE TWO THE NEWBERRY SUN FRIDAY, JUNE 20, 1962 Prosperity Items Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Leaphardt Jr., entertained with a buffet dinner last Tuesday evening, hon oring Miss Lottie Cumalander and Edward Sites of Chapin whose wedding took place, Sunday, June White gladioli, gardenias, and Queen Annes lace were used in the decorations. A miniature bride and groom was used on the dining room table. The guests included rel atives and close friends of the couple. Mrs. Elbert Shealy was hostess to the Crepe Myrtle Gardan Club last Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. W. E. Wessinger was pro gram leader and discussed roses and gave suggestions how to care for them. Mrs. W. B. Ackerman read a poem, “Mom and Pop’s Day.” In a guessing contest conducted by Mrs. J. W. Taylor, Mrs. C. K. Wheeler was prize winner. The hostess assisted by her daughter, Miss Faye Shealy served ice cream and cookies. Messrs. D. H. Hamm, Sr., D. H. Hamm, Jr. ,and J. Walter Hamm are in Chicago this week attending the Furniture market. Dr. Cyril Wheeler spent Sun day in Saluda with his sister, Mrs. W. D. Stone and Mr. Stone. Mr. and Mrs. Sam Beam of Newberry spent Sunday with Mrs. O. W. Amick and Miss Ruth Amick. Mrs. A. B. Hunt, Mrs. Joe Spotts and her two children, Lar ry and Frances Anne visited rela tives in Columbia Sunday. Mrs. W. L. Mills has returned from a week’s visit with relatives in Spartanburg and Woodruff. Miss Ethel Counts is attend ing the Farm Women’s Council at Winthrop this week. Mrs. P. C. Singley has been at Chimney Rock, N. C. for a few days. Mrs. E. D. Counts, Miss Ethel Counts and Miss Katherine Counts, Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Counts and their two sons, Gur- don Wright and Dicky were in Lincolnton, N. C. over the week end as guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Schrun. Mrs. Schrun had a birthday dinner Sunday for her mother, Mrs. E. O. Counts. Mrs. Counts and Miss Katherine Counts remained for a longer visit. Miss Martha Counts of the S. C. Medical College spent the weekend with her mother, Mrs. H. E. Counts, Sr. Mr. and Mrs. David Lee and their two children of Greenville were weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Ballentine. The Bal- lentines, the Lees, and Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Leaphart, Jr., attend ed the Cumulander-Sites wedding at St. Jacobs Church Sunday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Hamm have returned from their wedding trip and are occupying an apartment in the home of the Ralph Blacks. Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Richard and their two sons, A J. Jr., and Tommy, of Heath Springs spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. B. T. “Young. Dr. and Mrs. C. K. Wheeler Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Singley, Miss Patricia Singley and Miss Barbara Alice Brown attended the Im perial Shrine meeting in Miami, Fla. this week. The Singley’s were guests of Mrs. Singley’s sister. Miss Nellie Wise will arrive today (Friday) from Jacksonville, Fla., where she is a member of the city school faculty. Mrs. J. C. Taylor of Charleston en route to visit her son in Hendersonville, N. C. spent the weekend with her sister, Mrs. J. Frank Browne. Capt. A. B. Wise of Shaw Field visited his aunts, Mrs. J. F. Browne and Mrs. L. W. Har mon Sunday. Elton C. Sease, Sr., Elton, Jr., Johnny Sease, Miss Betty Richard son and Miss Janet Pitts of Co lumbia visited Mrs. J. A. Sease Sunday. Mrs. J. L. May of Eau Clair, Wis. is visiting Mrs. A. B. Hunt. Mrs. J. Walter Hamm is visit ing her parents in Cherryville, N. C. Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Shelton and their little daughter, Chauncey, of Columbia, spent Sunday with Mrs. Sheltoh’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. John W. Taylor. Mrs. H. P. Wicker has return ed from a trip to the West Coast. Capt. and Mrs. Martin Shaner and children of Travis *Air Base, Calif., spent Tuesday with Mrs. Shaner’s brother, the Rev. J. LeGrande Mayer and Mrs. Mayer. MRS. NEEL ATTENDING SUMMER SCHOOL IN TENN. Mrs. Collie Neel is attending summer school at the Peabody University in Nashville, Tenn., where she is working towards her degree in Library science. SANTA' DAYS OVER ... In Chicago, “fcol." Anthony Adams gave $30 thousand to drinking pals. Police discovered he had been forging his employer’s vouchers to finance his ‘‘philanthro pies.’’ No. 2137 Is cut in sizes 12 to 20: *0 U . Size 18. 4Vb yds. 35-in., 3 % yds. ri No. 2283 is cut in sizes 2. 4. «. 8. Ste« XVa yds. 35-ln. (or 1 100-lb feed bag) th 2 yds. edging. Send 30c for EACH pattern wltl me. address, style number and sU< AUDREY LANE BUREAU, Box 369 adison Square Station, New York 10 Y, The Spring-Summer Fashion Book Fellers Member National Angus Breeders Assn. E. R. Fellers of Newberry, has been elected to membership in the American Aberdeen - Angus Breeders’ Association at Chicago, announces Secretary Frank Rich ards. Mr. Fellers was one of the four purebred Aberdeen-Angus breeders elected from South Carolina during the past month to membership in the organiza tion. TUTAKE FOODS for the season * * beautiful with the colors which are available. They’ll be much more attractive and palatable. Canned cling peaches can be tilled with blueberries and served jn a lettuce cup. A soured cream dressing is perfect for this fruit md berry combination. Here’s a good tall drink for sip- iing: mix equal parts of apricot whole fruit nectar and pineapple juice, and then add an equal amount of ginger ale. Serve over ce cubes. A tasty addition to any fruit salad are pitted cherries which are stuffed Many People Want It! Your Photograph by Nichols So many people want your photo graph . . . your mother, sweetheart or wife, brothers, sisters, children, friends. And it is a gift no one but but you can give! Isn’t it about time to let Nichols take a fine picture of you? NICHOLS STUDIO Newberry, S. C. RECIPE OF THE WEEK Baconized Baked Beans (Serves 4) 8 slices bacon V* cup molasses 1 tablespoon vinegar 1 tablespoon prepared mustard 1 1-pound can baked beans Place bacon slices in a cold frying pan over low heat. Cook bacon slowly, about 8 to 10 min utes; turn once during cooking. Drain on absorbent paper; keep warm. Pour off. bacon fat; re turn 2 tablespoons of fat to skillet; blend in molasses, vine gar and mustard. Add beans; simmer 5 minutes. Serve with hot bacon slices. vith cream cheese and a piece i valnut. The cherries can easily 1 ntted with new pitters now aval ible. Avocado halves make a pret alad when they’re sprinkled wi emon juice to keep them fro larkening. Fill with fresh pin pple cubes and whole brig trawberries which have be< ulled. Pass French 4ressing ai ■ny baking powder biscuits. Here’s a delightful dessert: ma] graham cracker shell, bake ai sol. Fill with hard ice crear over with butterscotch sauce ai crinkle with chopped walnuts. Here’s a good sandwich to sen ith fruit salads for hot weath uncheons: soften cream chee: vith orange juice to spreading co istency, then stir in y 4 ci hopped, roasted almonds ar pread on thick slices of fruit n jread. ' ' . V: ^ ^ •• Longshore Services At Trinity Cemetery Mrs. Jessie Lee McKlttrick Longshore, 54, wife of J. J. (Jim) Longshore, died Friday at her home, RL 3, Newberry. She had been in declining health for two years and was seriously ill for the past week. She was born and reared in the Bush River section of Newberry county the daughter of Jim and Etta Moats McKlttrick. She was a member of Pentecostal Holiness Church of SilverstreeL Surviving are her husband, J. J. Longshore; five sons, James, Levi, Horace; of the home, John Joanna; one daughter, Mrs. Harold Stone, Newberry; one step-son, Herbert, Kinards; a step-daughter, Mrs. C. F. Adams, Whitmire; three brothers, Asa McKlttrick, Mountville; Guy Me- Kittrick, Ninety Six; Madison, Chappell; 16 grandchildren and 14 great-grandchildren. Graveside services were con ducted at 11 a.m. Sunday at Trini ty church cemetery by the Rev. O. E. Taylor and the Rev. Obart M. Sellers. Mrs. Nancy Hunter Rites Held Tuesday Mrs. Nancy Lula McLeod Hunt er, 82, died Sunday night at her home in .the St. Luke’s section of the county. She had been ill for the past five weeks. Mrs. Hunter was born in Jeffer son county, Georgia, and reared in Lexington county and was the daughter of the late James and Elizabeth Jane Corley McLeod. She was an active member of St. Luke’s Lutheran church, a charter member of the Women’s Mission ary Society. She is survived by her husband, Joseph W. Hunter, and two broth ers, J. C. McLeod, Prosperity, and J. J. McLeod, Savannah Beach, Ga. A number of nieces and nephews survive. Funeral services were held Tuesday morning at 11 o'clock from the graveside in SL Luke’s Lutheran church cemetery with Dr. Thomas W. Suber and Dr. J. B. Harman conducting the ser vice. Active pallbearers were Hayne Hunter, Sam Hunter, Walter Hunter, John R. McLeod, Joe Mc Leod, J. C. McLeod. Nieces assisted with the flow ers. Honorary escort was composed of members of St. Luke’s church council. Deed Transfers Newberry No. 1 Alva S. Dominiack to Marion Dargan Hoffmeyer and Myrtle Odom Hoffmeyer, one lot 112.5x 184.6’ and one building on Har rington street, $1300. J. Ellerbe Sease and Drayton L. Nance to Mrs. Martha S. Sease, one lot and one building, 1/3 undivided interest in Thomp son and Martin streets property. $6000. This deed was given on May 23, 1947 and recorded on June 13, 1962. -Newberry No. 1 Outside J. D. Caldwell and *E. B. Pur cell to B. M. Davis, one lot 81’x 171’ on Kate street, $400. Jacob L. Dicker! to Clyde R. Merrick, 76 acres, $3000. Bush River No. 3 i Arthur Brook Miller to Fairfield Forest Products Company, 600 acres, $18,320. Whitmire No. 4 Outside William C. Scott to S. C. Young and G. E. Young, 60 acres, $600 and other considerations. Pomarla No. 5 Mary Hite Hipp to Eloise Hipp Shuler, 340.68 acres, $1260. Airman Yaughn Serving At Pa. Air Force Base Airman 3rd Class James C. Vaughn, son of Mr. and Mrs. Claude Vaughn of 1200 Langford street, Newberry, has been as signed to the 1912th Airways and Air Communications Squadron (AACS), Olmsted AFB, Middle- town, Pa. Airman Vaughn is a graduate of Newberry High school where he was active in football and basket ball. He is also a graduate of the Air Force Teletype school at War ren AFB, Wyo. Vaughn has been assigned to duty as a teletype operator with the 1912th AACS squadron. This squadron is a unit of the major communications system of the U. S. Air Force. Its mission is to guide military aircraft to all parts of the world by radio means through the operation of com munications facilities and naviga tional aids along thousands of miles of airways. A/eur Play clothe* •fixe Stutdy end ^Taihiona.lfte BY EDNA BULBS # T HE playclothes in your summer wardrobe should be able to take it They should, that is, be in a fabric sturdy enough to stand up to really hard wear, to go through countless launderings and come out looking trim as a top* sail. They should also be in a fabric that’s sanforized so that it won’t shrink into something fit only for a midget. Once these basic requirements are well in mind, look for playclothes that provide the most fashion for your money with the maximum in comfort and freedom-of- action. You’ll find many such clothes this year; designers have gone all-out to do sun fashions that are different, that are flattering, that hide figure defects. The skort, for instance, is a newcomer under the sun. Sure fire for girls who want to slim the hipline, it’s really a part-skirt that buttons across each hip, revealing shorts front and back only. Further, the skort opens up flat for easy washing and ironing. In sanforized blusurf denim, worn with matching, tailored bra, this is a fashion that can take it all summer long. The pop-over shirt, cut the length of a man’s shirt, and given tapered sleeves, is another sun fashion that’s sturdy when it’s done in express stripes. Given a V-shaped turtle neck yoke and worn with tapered pedal pushers, it has a smart silhouette. < 1 -* Pop-over ahlrf In stripes has a V-shaped torftlo- neck yoke. Shirt is worn with tapered pedal pushers for smart overall line. This denim skort s com bination skirt-and-short, mini mizes hiplines. Fart\'*drt but tons screes each hip, vcvealins shorts front and back only. ; -SJ Gilbert-Cousins Wedding Solemnized In Columbia Miss Narvice Cousins, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jackson R. Cousins, formerly of Newberry and now. residing in Columbia, was united in marriage with Lt. Frederick Charles .Gilbert, Jr. on June 4 at 6:30 in the afternoon, at The Lutheran Church of Re formation in Columbia, with the double ring ceremony officiated by the brides’ pastor, The Rev. Wynne C. Boliek. The church was decorated with palms, ferns, baskets of daisies and floor candlelabra. Mr. Walter G. Wilkina, church organist and Miss Faye Dent, soloist, provided the wedding music. The candles were lighted by Lloyd and Floyd Cousins, twin cousins of the bride. Given in marriage by her fath er, the bride was lovely in her wedding dress of white embroider ed organdy with full ballerina skirt. Her shoulder length veM of bridal illusion fell from a halo hat of shirred illusion. She wore white shoes and short nylon mitts and carried a white prayer book topped with a white orchid. Miss Betty Floyd of Ndwberry was maid-of-honor and Mrs. Ed ward Turner, sister of the groom was matron-of-hohor. The bridesmaids were Miss Betty Jo Edens, Columbia; Miss Claudia Bolton, Tignal, Ga.; Miss Jane Sowell, McBee; and Miss Sue Halfacre, Newberry. The attendants wore dresses of white embroidered organdy over green taffeta and carried bouquets of daisies tied with green ribbon. The ushers were J. C. Cousins, uncle of the bride, Gordon Leslie and Gene Sowell, all of Newberry, and Edward Turner, brother-in- law of the groom and W. L. Briggs of Columbia. Frederick C. Gilbert, Sr., father of the groom was best man. Mrs. J. R. Cousins, mother of the bride wore a beige lace dress with matching accesories and. an orchid corsage. Mrs. F. C. Gilbert, Sr., mother of the groom wore a grey lace and chiffon dress with white hat and gloves and an orchid corsage. After the ceremony, a reception was held in the Fellowship Cen ter of the church. Assisting the bridal couple in receiving were their parents and attendants. Mrs. H. B. Wilson of Newber ry greeted the guests at the door. The guests were then introduced to the receiving line by Mr. and Mrs. James F. Coggins of New berry. The bride’s register was kept by Mrs. W. L. Briggs. Miss Pat Brehmer and Miss Bette Cousins of Newberry and Mrs. Wade Roberts and Miss Dorothy McNeil of Columbia served re freshments. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Edens said goodbye to the depart ing guests. The bridal couple left for a wedding trip to Florida but will stop in Newberry and Columbia before going to Camp Polk, La. Mrs. Gilbert received her edu cation at Limestone college and the University of South Carolina. Lt. Gilbert is a graduate of Clemson college where he re ceived his commission as 2nd Leu tenant in the U.S. Army. He was called to active duty March 13, 1951 and is now stationed at Camp Polk, Leesville, I*. THAT DAD O’MINE He’s “slowing down,’’ as some folks say, ' With the burden of years, from day to day; His brow bears many a furrow ed line; He’ growing old—that Dad O’ mine. His shoulders droop and step is slow And his hair is white, as white as snow; But blue eyes sparkle with friend ly light And his smile is warm and his heart is right. He’s old? Oh yes, but only in years. For his spirit soars as the sunset „ nears; And blest I’ve been and wealth I’ve had In knowing a man like my old Dad. And Proud I am to stand by him As he stood by me when the way was dim; I’ve found him worthy and just and fine And a prince of men—‘that Dad o’ mine.—ADAM N. REITER, from collection of Dr. R. E. Mason. Repair Permits Four building and repair per mits were issued during the past week to the following: June 4—to E. P. Mills for gen eral repairs to dwelling, 614 Glenn street, $400. June 5—to Mrs. Ada Brown for general repairs to dwelling, 1306 Jefferson “street, $176. June 6—to Furman Kyzer for general repairs to dwelling, 426 O’neal street,. $125. June 6—to Mrs. J. W. Chappell for repairs to dwelling and re movable of old flu, 1908 Main street, $200. Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Tarrer and two children, Barbara and Keith, of Rock Hill are spending this week with Mrs. Tarrer’s parei ' Vi * * Mr. anjl Mrs. John B. Harmon on Brown street. BACK TO CIVVIES . . . Gus tav Metzman, president of N.Y. Central R.R., takes off Army coat to don civvies and take over his railroad as ci vilian. He ran eastern roads for Army. This f 4>n ill Ti! sit * u I National DAIRY m i&JPI ' mmM MS * Month WMM Butter is truly Nature’s Masterpiece. As a spread, cooking aid or flavor ingred ient, butter has no equal. Across America the best cooks in homes, restaurants, hotels and eating places everywhere use butter. Winning favor with its flavor, no other ingredient makes so many foods taste better. Use butter liberally for breads and hot biscuits, waffles and pancakes, soups, potatoes, meats and poultry, vegetables, cakes and dozens of other foods. It’s Better with Newberry Maid Butter The creamy rich flavor of butter is the “key to good eating!” Into every gold en goodness of four pints of cream. NEWBERRY jCREAMERY Main and Vincent Streets Phone 14 Newberry, S. C. Remember .... "NEWBERRY MAID" Butter ... for Best Results o